Showing posts with label Stephen Shore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Shore. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2009

Into the Mystic

[Stephen Shore's photograph of a billboard in Oregon.]

The New York Times' Ken Johnson has a review today of a new show I'm dying to see at MoMA: Into the Sunset: Photography's Image of the American West. He notes that
The time during which white European civilization expanded into and eventually occupied North America coincides with the invention and development of photography. This is not just incidental. The idea of the West would be informed by machine-made images. That the medium itself can be used both for empirical documentation and visionary expression nicely mirrors the exhibition’s subject: the American West is real, but it is also a set of fantasies.
Johnson observes essentially that early photographs in the exhibition portray the hope and openness of the West, but that after World War II, things turn darker as those initial themes become "cliché for the tourism and real estate industries." The contemporary work in the show seems to reflect that with sometimes ironic cynicism. In conclusion he asks
Why does the exhibition project such a dim vision? Is it impossible for serious contemporary photography to see something better? Is failure and disappointment the real, unavoidable story? Or is it another myth, a paradoxically reassuring narrative to which many high-minded people now unthinkingly accede? If so, what would be the alternative?
[To which I answer: Have you not followed this very blog, sir?! For I am living it, somewhere between success and the skid road!]

And also that of course it's another myth, and worse, a predictable narrative for an exhibition such as this one to portray, if that is in fact what it does. But without having seen the show, I don't want to speculate too much – I'll have to re-visit after making the reverse journey to New York before Into the Sunset closes on June 8th.

Click here to read the New York Times review and see a slideshow of images from Into the Sunset, and click here to learn more about the exhibition at MoMA's brand new website.

---
Elsewhere in photography, James Danziger has been covering the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) show at his blog The Year In Pictures – always worth a look.

Daughter of Migrant Tennessee Coal Miner,
Sacramento, California
, 1936, by Dorothea Lange

Friday, August 15, 2008

Have You Seen the Colors

.
This show looks good.
Some very well-known stuff, some lesser-known.

When Color was New:
Vintage Photographs from Around the 1970s

Julie Saul Gallery
535 West 22 Street, 6th Floor
July 7 - September 6, 2008
Summer hours: Monday-Friday 11-6. Closed August 18-25.


Above, click to enlarge. Clockwise from top left:
William Christenberry, near Marion, Alabama, 1977
William Eggleston, Memphis, 1969
Stephen Shore, New York City, Sept-Oct 1972
Mitch Epstein, Topanga Canyon, California, 1974


Joel Sternfeld, McLean, Virginia, December 4th 1978


Unrelated and underrated:

Samara Lubelski Have You Seen the Colors mp3

Samara Lubelski has a bunch of solo records and has also played with Thurston Moore, White Magic, the American Analog Set, and many others. More info at her website.